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Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1972-01-20

Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1972-01-20, page 01

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JANUARY 20, 1972 - SHEVAT 4
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PARIS (WNS) — French author Gilles Perrault has launched a world-wide campaign to free Leopold Trepper, former leader of the World War II anti-Nazi "Red Orchestra" espionage ring. In announcing the formation of his movement, Perrault revealed that Trepper's fourth application to leave Poland and join his sons in Israel had been rejected. "We want Trepper and.we will get him come what may and by whatever methods we may have to use. All methods are fair and right in fighting anti-Semitism and in trying to help save a man who stood up to Hitler and the Gestapo and helped us win the second World War.v Perrault said. .
NEW YORK (WNS) — The American Jewish Committee, in a letter to Mayor John V. Lindsay, has warned that the Forest Hills housing controversy may lead to "mass conflict in the city." They offered to sponsor a "laboratory for crisis resolution between the principals in the dispute using'tfie expertise of the Community Confrontation and Communication > Associates" which helped settle .racial disputes in Camden, N.J,, Asbury Park, N.J. and Grand Rapids; Mich.
NEW YORK (WNS) — Representative James
Scheuer (D., N.Y.) was arrested by Soviet police while
visiting the home of a Soviet Jewish scientist who had
applied for an emigration visa. Scheuer was held by
- i 'police for 45 minutes when he' could not produce his
<■-.-- Passport.-Scheuer was arrested while visiting, with
J" Sr£w/Alexander Lerner r a famous'computer expert
and professor of cybernetics in Moscow. Lerner was" ,
one of nine Soviet scientists who were fired from their
jobs after applying for exit visas to emigrate to Israel.
- ■—■.——■*■ '■ * • — ■ ■ —-■■'■ ■ - ■ ■ — ■ .i ^™"T
Workers Institute To Kick Off Trades & Professions Div.
The Trades & Professions
Division of the 1972 Cam¬ paign of the United Jewish'
Fund and Council, the'
largest single Division in the
Campaign organization, will
hold a Workers' Breakfast,
Institute and Clinic next
Sunday morning beginning
at .9- a.m. trtrTRe—Melton
Community Services
Building. Morris Fleishman, -
Chairman of the Trades & i Professions! and Heinz ••■?■. Hoffman, Co-Chairman,
have announced that the V speaker for the Institute will :v'ype Yehuda Hellman, ■}r: Executive Director of the ••' Conference of Presidents of - (aiMajop American Jewisji ' Organizations, and a
foremost authority on the
Middle East. In addition to Mr:
Hellman, who will give an
•:;'. authoritative, report on the
/ current situation of World
..<:-• Jewry, with- special em-
' phasis on the position of
Jews in Israel and. in the
Soviet .Union, the local, and
.'national needs of the more
than 40 beneficiary agencies
andCouncirwiH.be explained by Sidney K. Blatt, vice president of the UJFC and a past campaign chairman, who is now chairman of the Budget Steering Committee. Campaign techniques and the Dynamics of Solicitation. will . be!,:explained aridi?a!i discussion led by -Ira Monroe, an Associate Chairman; of, the Advance.1 Gifts Division. A complete appraisal of the needs which must be met in this year's campaign, as well as the best methods of solicitation to be
First Soviet Jewish Family Arrives Under Attorney Generals Authority
NEW YORK, NX—The first family of Soviet Jews to be admitted to this country under ..the U.S. Attorney Generaj's parole authority arrived last week at Ken-^ nedy -Airport. Simion and* Emma Feldman and their two children, Dina, 10, and Igor, 7, were warmly received by Mr-. Feldmah's uncle, Charles Miller, 2057 Narragansett Avenue, Bronx, N.Y., and other relatives. Mr. Feldman, 36, is the only son of Mr. Miller's deceased sister, . . Welcoming the newcomers on behalf of the Attorney General, was Sol Marks,
District Director of the New York office of the U.S. Im- m i g r a t i o ny an d Naturalization Service.' Also on hand to receive the family was New York Congressman Edward Koch, ■ who has expressed great concern about the plight' of Soviet Jewry. •
United Hias Service handled all the details. Harold . Friedman . and Gaynor Jacobson, president and executive vice president, respectively, of the worldwide ' Jewish migration agency, were also at the airport to greet the
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 3)
YEHUDAHELLMAN
employed, if maximum results are to be obtained; will be undertaken in a forthright manner, so that each solicitor and worker can then go out to see his prospects, ^armed with the know|edge anil ; uh- derstajiding necessary to get the be|| possible gift.
"1972 is a year unlike all other years," Mr. Fleishman explained. "This is the first time for many years that no goal has been adopted for the Campaign,. Rather, the amount of money necessary for us to raise has been set by the fair share appraisal of the needs, and the Board of Trustees has fixed that fair share at $3,300,000. We have almost 100 workers in the Professions ajm.atthe :tUte next bi§ to give them all the.facts about the Campaign, so that when they go out, after the Institute, to see their prospects, they wfll be able to communicate to them the full dimensions of
(CONTINUED ON PACE 131
Trades j,'Division.t
^W.drkers^ Sunday, ti
GolaVlAeir Invites Frank H. Nutis To Israelr Conference
1 Prime -Minister^ Golda . Meir of Israel has invited Frank R- Nutis, prominent Columbus communal and business' leader, to an ex¬ traordinary conference on Israel's economic needs which will be held in Jerusalem from Sunday, Jan. 30 through Tuesday, Feb. 1.
Mr. Nutis arid leaders from other cities invited to the Jerusalem Conference will depart for Israel from New York's John F. Ken¬ nedy Airport on- Saturday evening,. Jan. 29, aboard a special El Al Israel Airlines plane.
The .three-day conference has been convened by Mrs. Meir= in order to deal with Israel's immediate and long- range economic problems, and to find ways to expand and strengthen Israel's
UJfEC 1972 Campaign Will Try To "Keep The Promise"
-« *>
FRANK R.NUT|jS
economy in the coming year with the help of the Israel Bond Organization.
The U.S. members of the conference will be headed by Ira Guilden, of New York, President pf the Israel Bond Organization, Som Roth- berg, General Chairman, and Leo Bernstein, Executive Vice President. The organization has been
(CONTINUEO ON PAGE 14)
Gordon Zacks, General Chairman of the 1972, Campaign of the United Jewish Fund and Council, has announced that "KEEP THE PROMISE" willbe the theme of the drive just getting under way.
"If we are to KEEP THE PROMISE we have made to so many,'*' Mr. Zacks stated, "we must mobilize all of our strength and resources., We must KEEP THE PROMISE we have made to the people of Israel, and to Jews all over the world. We shall KEEP THE PROMISE of a haven in Israel for all those who seejt freedom from oppression, freedom to live as Jews among Jews, who are now pouring out of Russia and other countries where they cartho longer live as Jews.''
"The leadership and workers.who have agreed to work for the success of this year's. Campaign," con¬
tinued Mr. Zacks, "typify the' best people in our com¬ munity. They are successful in business and professional life, involved in community affairs. Above all, they are committed to, the cause, and' willing to give their time and energy to help assure, the survival of Israel, and the continuity^ the growth and ^development of Jewish in¬ stitutions and agencies in Columbus, around the country, : and around the world-."
During the next few weeks, Mr. Zacks stated, many thousands of people will be solicited for their gifts. Selected individuals are even now being seen, and results to date have been excellent. The Young Matrons and Women's Divisions, which have already begun . their: solicitation, are off to a fine start, with Young Matrons
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 3)
Attorney General John N- Mitchell meets with the' firs^.family of Soviet Jews to enter the United States under his^parole authority/Left to right are Charles Miller, Bronx, New York, uncle of the head of'the family; Mrs. Semen Mordkovich Feldman; Dina Feldman, 10; Attorney General Mitchell; Igor.Feld- . mani 7; Mr. Feldmanxand Max Fisher, president of -the Counciliof JewisVfederations and Welfare Funds. The Feldmahs,wlwpkin°'%Uvein''ihe^«unxi cannot speak English,^conveyed their appreciation to the . j Attorney Gehera^^gh^to^'Jifiller^ Mr, Fisheip"-„'- played a key rolejin advising the Departments of State and Justice as to the need to use the Attorney General's legal authority to allow .Soviet; Jews to enter this country.
Balshone To Receive ORT Award ,,
Beh Balshone has been - selected by the American ORT Federation as tlfe 1972 recipient of the Achievement Award. Mr. Balshone .is President of Columbus Men's ORT and is a member of the Board of Directors of the American ORT Federation and its Executive Committee. He was one of the charter founders,of the Columbus chapter and, this year,- spearheaded the dinner in honor of Theodore Beckman, and established the Beckman Scholarship Fund.
Mr. Balshone, a well- known businessman in Columbus, is President Of the Lynn Drug Company of Columbus, President of Lynn Uni-Systems,Ji^ce-President
BEN BALSHONE
of First Investment Com¬ pany Mortgage Bankers, and Deputy Director of the Bureau of Motor Vehicles of the State of Ohio. He is the
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 16)
Soviet Scientists Appeal To International Groups For Nejp
LONDON (JTA) - Nine Soviet Jewish scientists who were fired from their jobs after applying for visas to go to Israel and those, visa requests ware rejected have appealed for help to in¬ ternational scientific groups abroad. The text of the ap¬ peal, just released, noted that "the Soviet authorities particularly tried to oppose the defiartore of professional people" and called this "amoral and contrary to the letter and'spirit of in¬ ternational "agreements and declarations." The scientists said, "At present we are debarred from scientific •.work, from teaching and from associating with our colleagues. The in¬
ternational character oT science gives us the right to appeal to you for help." The ' appeal was sent to the Inr ternational Amalgamation of Electronic Societies, the. International Federation of Automatic Controls, the International Mathematical Union and the International Federation for Inferwhation Processing. The* group of V nine is headed*by Prof. Aleksahder Lerner, a computer expert and former professor of cybernetics in \ Moscow. The t other signatories were Dr.' Roman Rut man, Vladimir Vaksman, Viach'eslav Rauchman, Leonid Frank, Viktor Polsky, Joseph
(CONTINUEO ON PACE W

..,. Associates" which helped settle .racial disputes in Camden, N.J,, Asbury Park, N.J. and Grand Rapids; Mich.
NEW YORK (WNS) — Representative James
Scheuer (D., N.Y.) was arrested by Soviet police while
visiting the home of a Soviet Jewish scientist who had
applied for an emigration visa. Scheuer was held by
- i 'police for 45 minutes when he' could not produce his
FRANK R.NUT|jS
economy in the coming year with the help of the Israel Bond Organization.
The U.S. members of the conference will be headed by Ira Guilden, of New York, President pf the Israel Bond Organization, Som Roth- berg, General Chairman, and Leo Bernstein, Executive Vice President. The organization has been
(CONTINUEO ON PAGE 14)
Gordon Zacks, General Chairman of the 1972, Campaign of the United Jewish Fund and Council, has announced that "KEEP THE PROMISE" willbe the theme of the drive just getting under way.
"If we are to KEEP THE PROMISE we have made to so many,'*' Mr. Zacks stated, "we must mobilize all of our strength and resources., We must KEEP THE PROMISE we have made to the people of Israel, and to Jews all over the world. We shall KEEP THE PROMISE of a haven in Israel for all those who seejt freedom from oppression, freedom to live as Jews among Jews, who are now pouring out of Russia and other countries where they cartho longer live as Jews.''
"The leadership and workers.who have agreed to work for the success of this year's. Campaign," con¬
tinued Mr. Zacks, "typify the' best people in our com¬ munity. They are successful in business and professional life, involved in community affairs. Above all, they are committed to, the cause, and' willing to give their time and energy to help assure, the survival of Israel, and the continuity^ the growth and ^development of Jewish in¬ stitutions and agencies in Columbus, around the country, : and around the world-."
During the next few weeks, Mr. Zacks stated, many thousands of people will be solicited for their gifts. Selected individuals are even now being seen, and results to date have been excellent. The Young Matrons and Women's Divisions, which have already begun . their: solicitation, are off to a fine start, with Young Matrons
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 3)
Attorney General John N- Mitchell meets with the' firs^.family of Soviet Jews to enter the United States under his^parole authority/Left to right are Charles Miller, Bronx, New York, uncle of the head of'the family; Mrs. Semen Mordkovich Feldman; Dina Feldman, 10; Attorney General Mitchell; Igor.Feld- . mani 7; Mr. Feldmanxand Max Fisher, president of -the Counciliof JewisVfederations and Welfare Funds. The Feldmahs,wlwpkin°'%Uvein''ihe^«unxi cannot speak English,^conveyed their appreciation to the . j Attorney Gehera^^gh^to^'Jifiller^ Mr, Fisheip"-„'- played a key rolejin advising the Departments of State and Justice as to the need to use the Attorney General's legal authority to allow .Soviet; Jews to enter this country.
Balshone To Receive ORT Award ,,
Beh Balshone has been - selected by the American ORT Federation as tlfe 1972 recipient of the Achievement Award. Mr. Balshone .is President of Columbus Men's ORT and is a member of the Board of Directors of the American ORT Federation and its Executive Committee. He was one of the charter founders,of the Columbus chapter and, this year,- spearheaded the dinner in honor of Theodore Beckman, and established the Beckman Scholarship Fund.
Mr. Balshone, a well- known businessman in Columbus, is President Of the Lynn Drug Company of Columbus, President of Lynn Uni-Systems,Ji^ce-President
BEN BALSHONE
of First Investment Com¬ pany Mortgage Bankers, and Deputy Director of the Bureau of Motor Vehicles of the State of Ohio. He is the
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 16)
Soviet Scientists Appeal To International Groups For Nejp
LONDON (JTA) - Nine Soviet Jewish scientists who were fired from their jobs after applying for visas to go to Israel and those, visa requests ware rejected have appealed for help to in¬ ternational scientific groups abroad. The text of the ap¬ peal, just released, noted that "the Soviet authorities particularly tried to oppose the defiartore of professional people" and called this "amoral and contrary to the letter and'spirit of in¬ ternational "agreements and declarations." The scientists said, "At present we are debarred from scientific •.work, from teaching and from associating with our colleagues. The in¬
ternational character oT science gives us the right to appeal to you for help." The ' appeal was sent to the Inr ternational Amalgamation of Electronic Societies, the. International Federation of Automatic Controls, the International Mathematical Union and the International Federation for Inferwhation Processing. The* group of V nine is headed*by Prof. Aleksahder Lerner, a computer expert and former professor of cybernetics in \ Moscow. The t other signatories were Dr.' Roman Rut man, Vladimir Vaksman, Viach'eslav Rauchman, Leonid Frank, Viktor Polsky, Joseph
(CONTINUEO ON PACE W